there were a lot of rough patches. she seemed to be using the performance that i was attending (the last show) as a practice for something else rather than actually performing a solid show. the jokes were funny. i laughed. i liked her stuff.
she mentioned being subversive but we are a liberal bunch at the mn fringe so the "in your face" comedy that she may have been relying on wasn't hitting as hard as she might have liked.
that said, she was funny. the material was good. just tighten it up.

i liked this show a lot. it was funny, engaging, and relevant. i loved her body confidence and the songs were great! i usually hate musicals too!
this show sheds light on the double bind that women face every day with their sexuality and the societal pressures we have to balance.
well done!

i liked the period piece of this. i thought the crass jokes were funny to a degree, as i didn't expect them given the time this piece was set in. i enjoyed myself at this show though. i laughed and thought it was fun overall.
HOWEVER, the ending was a surprise as it seemed the cast just decided that was enough for the night and they were going to skip the rest of the play. the audience looked around at one another confused as the lights came up. it felt unresolved.
further, the two characters that came in after the man was shot- the trans woman and her partner... totally extraneous characters. who were they? i didn't understand much about what their role was? ok, ok, maaaayyybe the stage hand guy, but the trans woman- did they just want to throw that in as a novelty to claim lgbtq content? that was very confusing to me.
i was entertained, however, and i did laugh some. and that is why we have the fringe!

i liked this show. it was funny and definitely "fringey." i loved that the phone voices were acted live along with that funny ass recorder.
however, i'm docking several points for it lacking in cultural sensitivity. there were some pieces labeled "black and married." the concept is hilarious. however, the voice on the phone was clearly not of an african american male but he tried to speak like one, using stereotypical vernacular. it didn't work.
worse, i had brought my african american friend to the show- his first ever fringe show!!!! --- and this was what he experienced. he didn't say anything to me about it- and he did think the show was funny and enjoyed himself at the festival- but i was mortified.
interesting concept- not done with any sensitivity at all.

this was really funny. it was a filler show for me, an impulse show. i LOVE when this happens. i was fully entertained didn't look at my watch once, until that last song- but even then she approached it with a lot of energy and it wasn't a loss.

i freaking loved this performance! i was engaged and watching closely the entire time. the last 10 minutes did start to feel a little long but the choreography was beautiful and i wanted to run down on stage and join them!
it is not a show for kids as my little one who i brought along was bored, which may have been why the last 10 minutes were tough. haha

this show was fun. there were parts that made me laugh. but i did look at my phone a few times to check the time. i'm not a musician so i couldn't relate to any of this. the show itself was done well, but i may not have been the correct demographic for the audience.

i liked the premise. i have felt like the heroine of this story many times over so it was relate-able in an odd way. at times it seemed the writing relied on too many local jokes, which cheapened it, but it was funny and i was entertained the whole hour.

I almost skipped this one because I don’t care to spend my fringe at church but this was a show of forward thinking, bad ass women! I love that it emphasized inclusivity and had a variety of segments.
Sometimes it felt a little too deep, like I wasn’t quite following their intention behind the piece but overall it was bold and powerful!